Antibiotics Flashcards
Classes of antibiotics
- Carbapenems
- Aminoglycosides
- Penicillins
- Cephalosporins
- Fluoroquinolones
- Macrolides
- Tetracyclines
- Anti-anaerobics
- Others
- “Big Guns”
Carbapenems
- Imipenem/cilastatin (Primaxin or “gorillamycin”)
- Meropenem
- Ertapenem (Invanz)
These are beta lactam antibiotics, meaning they have a beta lactam ring in their molecular structure
All beta lactam antibiotics bind to penicillin binding proteins (PBPs) in the bacteria’s cell wall and inhibit them
PBPs are a group of proteins in some bacteria that have a affinity for binding to penicillin and are essential for cell wall synthesis
Impipenem/cilastatin
Carbapenem
- 500 mg q8h IV
- Trade name = Primaxin
- Nickname = Gorillamycin
- Imipenem = broad spectrum beta lactam antibiotic
- Cilastatin = inhibits renal clearance of imipenem
- First line antibiotic for necrotizing fasciitis
- Renal clearance
- Cross reactivity with PCN allergy (NOT pen safe)
- Hard to send patient home on this antibiotic due to frequency in dosing
Meropenem
Carbapenem
- 500 mg to 1 g q8h IV
- No trade name
- Carbapenem antibiotic (PBP inhibitor)
- NOTE: PBP = penicillin binding protein, a group of proteins in some bacteria that have a affinity for binding to penicillin and are essential for cell wall synthesis, all beta lactam antibiotics bind to PBPs and inhibit them, killing the bacteria
- Meropenem covers some strep (not strep D), no staph coverage
- Covers pseudomonas and bacteroides (BETTER gram negavtive coverage than imipenem)
Ertapenem
Carbapenem
- 1 g q24h IV
- Trade name = Invanz
- Covers all staph (except MRSA), all strep (except strep D)
- No pseudomonal coverage
- Covers ALL anaerobes
- Recommended for LE infections
- Once daily dosing which is convenient
Aminoglycosides
- Streptomycin
- Gentamycin
- Kanamycin
- Amikacin
- Tobramycin
- Neomycin
Which aminoglycoside can be used in antibiotic beads?
Gentamycin
General aminoglycoside information
- Protein synthesis inhibitors (bind to 30s subunit)
- Used to treat serious gram negative aerobic bacteria
- Used with a beta-lactam antibiotic to treat serious gram negative infections
- IRREVERSIBLE nephrotoxicity and ototoxicity
- Need to check renal function and order peaks and troughs to monitor
- Usually there is a safer alternative
- Rare to prescribe these
Penicillins
- 1st generation: naturally occurring
- 2nd generation: penicillinase producing (naf, diclox/clox, ox, meth)
- 3rd generation: (amoxicillin, ampicillin - tx some gram neg)
- 4th generation: big gun antibiotics, cover pseudomonal and enterococcus
Nafcillin
2nd generation
- Dose: 1 g q4 hours IV
- DRUG OF CHOICE for MSSA
- Biliarily cleared
Dicloxacillin/cloxacillin
2nd generation
- Dose: 500 mg QID PO
- DRUG OF CHOICE for MSSA
- Coverage: mild to moderate staph infections, staph skin cellulitis or skin infection (folliculitis, boils, carbuncles, etc.)
- Used for osteo, septic arthritis, septicemia, empiric endocarditis
- Renal clearance
Amoxicillin/clavulanic acid
3rd generation
- Augmentin
- Dose: 875 mg PO BID (125 mg clavulanic acid in all doses)
- EMPIRIC antibiotic for diabetic wounds
- Drug of choice for human/animal bite wounds
- Covers most common gram negative anaerobe isolated in diabetic wounds - BACTEROIDES FRAGILIS
Ampicillin/sulbactam
3rd generation
- Unasyn
- Dose: 3 g q6 hours IV
- Not absorbed well oral, so used IV
- Covers
- DRUG OF CHOICE for GAS GANGRENE